Invertiel Viaduct in Kirkcaldy, Scotland

in Worldmappinyesterday

Don't you find centuries old architecture fascinating? I mean just how did they build structures a couple of hundred years ago that not only look amazing but still are standing strong without the technology that we have today?

Come back in a hundred years and what will be left of the things that get put up now?

Today then we visit a beautiful old structure just down my street in Kirkcaldy

Invertiel Viaduct in Kirkcaldy, Scotland.png

image.png

Kirkcaldy is a town located in Fife, on the east coast of Scotland, about 11+1⁄2 miles north of Edinburgh and 27+1⁄2 miles south-southwest of Dundee.

Kirkcaldy's rail history began in 1847 with the opening of its first railway station as part of the Edinburgh and Northern Railway.

But let's get back to 2025

image.png

Some of you might recognise this as murder hill 👀 yes looking at you @asiaymalay and our local football club's ground Raith Rovers is visible.

image.png

You can see the football club on the map from Hive's very own worldmappin, but we are walking down the hill.

This is what you see!

image.png

image.png

We are at the top of Mill Street and if we zoom up, isn't it great the tech we have at our finger tips.

image.png

Look how tall the arches are.

The other thing you will notice is that the viaduct is in a gully.

image.png

There we see one of the stands of the football stadium, it is actually the stand where the home fans sit.

The houses you see are most definitely not from 1847 and I very much doubt if they will be in existence in 2087!

image.png

TRAIN ...

image.png

While we are in zoom mode, let's take a look on the right side of the viaduct.

image.png

Do you see it? It looks like the viaduct disappears into trees!

image.png

image.png

What is a Viaduct?

As per the Cambridge Dictionary .. a Viaduct is ...

a long bridge-like structure, typically a series of arches, carrying a road or railway across a valley or other low ground.

image.png

Awesome Arches!

image.png

Remember I said it was in a gully.

These photos were all taken at 11am on a beautiful January day.

Yes, there is frost on the ground!

image.png

That is the closest to snow as we get and you can see the yellow grit bin which contains salt to combat the ice.

image.png

image.png

The Tiel burn

image.png

Trains can't swim, well not yet and certainly not in 1847 when this was viaduct was built.

image.png

There was no way around the Tiel burn. Burn being the Scottish word for a stream.

Look at the stonework, I love how they made arches.

image.png

So this magnificent structure had to be built to carry the trains and passengers not to mention goods over the wee bit of water!

image.png

The wee Bridge and the giant Viaduct

image.png

I have had no reason to walk down Mill St and never knew there was a wee bridge across the Tiel burn here and one day I shall walk over it and see where I go!

Do you see something in the water that was not there in 1847?

Shopping carts the scourge of the countryside

image.png

The Tiel burn does go past an old mill on it's journey to the beach.

image.png

Where it discharges into the sea.

image.png

image.png

Another train from the other direction

image.png

Something else not from 1847!

image.png

Do you see it?

A fluffing plastic bag.

image.png

You do get a great view of the wee bridge and viaduct.

image.png

With the blue sky it makes for some great shots.

image.png

Especially an arched viaduct...

image.png

... when I try to take panoramic shots!

image.png

image.png

Almost a fish eye type pic to leave you with!

image.png

Invertiel Viaduct - The details

Did you guess how many arches there are, or how long it is?

The Invertiel Viaduct is a Category B listed structure, and is recognized for its architectural and historical significance. It is constructed of sandstone and features eight arches, including one "blind" arch that was filled in during construction. The viaduct is approximately 429 feet long and 80 feet high, making it a prominent landmark in our local area.

image.png

Thanks for visiting and I hope you enjoyed seeing the Invertiel Viaduct in Kirkcaldy, Scotland.

image.png

All images and ramblings are from me, the mad Scotsman TengoLoTodo unless otherwise stated. Note images are all snapped by me with my Google Pixel 9 XL Pro smartphone on 30th January 2025 and some were used in canva to make the lead image.
@tengolotodo February 10th 2025

DO WHAT YOU LOVE AND DO IT OFTEN

Haste Ye Back!

Sort:  
Congratulations, your post has been added to The WorldMapPin Map! 🎉



You can check out this post and your own profile on the map. Be part of the Worldmappin Community and join our Discord Channel to get in touch with other travelers, ask questions or just be updated on our latest features.

Awesome thanks guys and here is to a great new week.

You are awesome too, have a great week and thanks for using @worlsmappin! 🙌

@tengolotodo, one of your Hive friends wishes you a Happy Valentine's day and asked us to give you a new badge!

Valentine's Day 2025

To find out who wanted you to receive this special gift, click here!

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking

Check out our last posts:

Valentine's Day Event – Spread Love with a Special Badge! 💝

Love it! Thanks buzzy 💙 and Happy Valentine's Day to you.

Enjoy your new badge @tengolotodo ❤️

This looks like a bridge and from the look of things its has old has time itself

Yes almost 200 years young

Ohh wow you mean the structure as been up there since 200 years now?

Almost yes, since 1847.

Wow! It is a nice place.

Indeed it is I think.

That is a really neat piece of architecture. Yes, I do find it amazing how people were able to construct such things so many years ago without all the tech we have today. Just amazing. I wonder if people of today could do the same if we lost access to our technology.

Sad to see that littering is a thing there as well as here. We have the same problem with grocery carts and plastic bags as well.

I wonder if people of today could do the same if we lost access to our technology

I think we are getting too reliant on tech. Look what happens if you take a phone away from someone, especially younger than us, they freak out 🤣

The pictures share real fun😃

Glad you think so 😁

That is such a beautiful viaduct, and yes I also wonder how they made such a structure a hundred years ago, and still stands beautifully, furthermore it is still in use. If only that thing was built here in my country, I think some of those stones would end up in someone's house kilometers away, or maybe the whole outer stone would be destroyed. We tend to not like beautiful infrastructure here in the country, and love to vandal it.
!LOLZ a sad but painful fact. !PIZZA

You can tune a piano
But you can't piano a tuna.

Credit: reddit
@tengolotodo, I sent you an $LOLZ on behalf of ekavieka

(1/8)
NEW: Join LOLZ's Daily Earn and Burn Contest and win $LOLZ

It is gorgeous Eka, and you know growing up it is something we don't blink an eye at.
I guess only now when we are older do we appreciate the beauty of it and perhaps the injuries to men that built it.

That is sad that there you don't like beautiful infrastructure. I thought you guys did!

That is sad that there you don't like beautiful infrastructure. I thought you guys did

well, I do appreciate the beautiful one, or mostly all the infrastructure as it will help us in some way, and it is built using our tax money, and maybe most of the other citizens. But still, there were some rotten ones, who spread the rot faster and ruin the beautiful things that we have.

Look at some very beautiful pictures my friend

Thank you, always fun to take beautiful pictures

You managed to capture the beauty of this place very well my brother ♥️

I appreciate that, thank you, I did try to.

The city of Scotland is a site for tourism

Yeah we have a lot for tourists to see in Scotland

I enjoyed seeing those ancient architecture. Surprised that it is still in operation. I was thinking you could climb and walk through that railway😁😌.

If it wasn't in operation there would be chaos as that is the main trainline that goes up North and takes us south to Edinburgh the capital.
There are steps up over the bridge, so maybe I will go when it is warm day!

Luckily it's still working despite it's been there forever. Ah, how impressive they construct infrastructure before😌

Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honorable Mentions in Travel Digest #2467.

Your post has been manually curated by the @worldmappin team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!

Become part of our travel community:

Excellent images of very interesting structures! Nowadays, they make ephemeral structures. Permanence is not their concern! I look at the images and wondered how a grocery cart got into the river and why no one has pulled it out? And indeed: all rivers will reach the sea. A hug the size of those viaducts, Ed!